1,199 research outputs found

    Pattern Formation in Mesic Savannas

    Get PDF
    We analyze a spatially extended version of a well-known model of forest-savanna dynamics, which presents as a system of nonlinear partial integro-differential equations, and study necessary conditions for pattern-forming bifurcations. Homogeneous solutions dominate the dynamics of the standard forest-savanna model, regardless of the length scales of the various spatial processes considered. However, several different pattern-forming scenarios are possible upon including spatial resource limitation, such as competition for water, soil nutrients, or herbivory effects. Using numerical simulations and continuation, we study the nature of the resulting patterns as a function of system parameters and length scales, uncovering subcritical pattern-forming bifurcations and observing significant regions of multistability for realistic parameter regimes. Finally, we discuss our results in the context of extant savanna-forest modeling efforts and highlight ongoing challenges in building a unifying mathematical model for savannas across different rainfall levels

    Fideicomiso operativo

    Get PDF
    El presente trabajo de investigación tiene por objeto estudiar los fideicomisos operativos y los efectos de su utilización en Argentina en la actualidad, sirviendo como guía a los Contadores Públicos, ya que escasea la bibliografía en sus aspectos contables e impositivos. El tema de estudio fue elegido debido a que a partir de la crisis del 2001 que sufrió la Argentina, la utilización de fideicomisos fue un excelente medio para garantizar el cumplimiento de los distintos proyectos, que a su vez generaron un importante desarrollo económico. El fideicomiso se encuentra dentro de las figuras jurídicas que buscan darle al sistema económico una herramienta que permita hacer cumplir funciones tales como: limitación de la responsabilidad, mediante la afectación de un patrimonio a un objeto específico, resultando ese patrimonio la única fuente de garantía de los acreedores del fideicomiso, asegurar el cumplimiento del negocio subyacente a través de la separación patrimonial.Fil: Giménez Vera, Carla Denis. Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas.Fil: Martín, Tamara Elisabeth. Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas.Fil: Martínez, Andrés Damián. Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas

    TGF-β2 dictates disseminated tumour cell fate in target organs through TGF-β-RIII and p38α/β signalling

    Get PDF
    In patients, non-proliferative disseminated tumour cells (DTCs) can persist in the bone marrow (BM) while other organs (such as lung) present growing metastasis. This suggested that the BM might be a metastasis ‘restrictive soil’ by encoding dormancy-inducing cues in DTCs. Here we show in a head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) model that strong and specific transforming growth factor-β2 (TGF-β2) signalling in the BM activates the MAPK p38α/β, inducing an (ERK/p38)low signalling ratio. This results in induction of DEC2/SHARP1 and p27, downregulation of cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4) and dormancy of malignant DTCs. TGF-β2-induced dormancy required TGF-β receptor-I (TGF-β-RI), TGF-β-RIII and SMAD1/5 activation to induce p27. In lungs, a metastasis ‘permissive soil’ with low TGF-β2 levels, DTC dormancy was short-lived and followed by metastatic growth. Importantly, systemic inhibition of TGF-β-RI or p38α/β activities awakened dormant DTCs, fuelling multi-organ metastasis. Our work reveals a ‘seed and soil’ mechanism where TGF-β2 and TGF-β-RIII signalling through p38α/β regulates DTC dormancy and defines restrictive (BM) and permissive (lung) microenvironments for HNSCC metastasis.Fil: Bragado, Paloma. Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Tisch Cancer Institute; Estados UnidosFil: Estrada, Yeriel. Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Tisch Cancer Institute; Estados UnidosFil: Parikh, Falguni. Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Tisch Cancer Institute; Estados UnidosFil: Krause, Sarah. University Hospital of Schleswig-Holstein; AlemaniaFil: Capobianco, Carla Sabrina. Universidad Nacional de Quilmes. Departamento de Ciencia y Tecnología. Laboratorio de Oncología Molecular; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Farina, Hernán Gabriel. Universidad Nacional de Quilmes. Departamento de Ciencia y Tecnología. Laboratorio de Oncología Molecular; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Schewe, Denis M.. Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Tisch Cancer Institute; Estados UnidosFil: Aguirre Ghiso, Julio A.. Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Tisch Cancer Institute; Estados Unido

    Structural characterization of oxidized dimeric Scapharca inaequivalvis hemoglobin by resonance Raman spectroscopy.

    Get PDF
    Resonance Raman spectra of the ferric homodimeric hemoglobin from Scapharca inaequivalvis have been measured over the pH range 5.8-8.3 in buffers of ionic strengths 0.01 and 0.1 M to determine the spin and coordination state of the iron atom. Three species contribute to the spectra: a low spin hexacoordinate, a high spin pentacoordinate, and a high spin hexacoordinate component. Optical absorption and EPR spectra measured under the same conditions allowed the identification of the ligands in the sixth coordination position, namely the distal histidine in the low spin derivative and a water molecule in the high spin one. The relative concentrations of these three species depend on pH in an unusual way. Thus, the aquomet derivative is present over the whole pH range, albeit in small amounts as most of the hemoglobin converts to the low spin hemichrome at acid pH values and to the pentacoordinate derivative at neutral and slightly alkaline ones. The formation of a pentacoordinate heme as the pH is increased has not been reported previously for other myoglobins and hemoglobins. Low ionic strength and high protein concentration favor the formation of the high spin pentacoordinate species, while at high ionic strength and low protein concentration the low spin hexacoordinate species prevails. Ionization of the iron-bound water molecule occurs at pH > or = 9.3; accordingly, signals from the hydroxyl derivative were not observed in the Raman spectra over the pH range studied

    productive response of duroc x large white and commercial hybrid x large white crosses fed high and low protein diets

    Get PDF
    Thirty five Duroc x Large White (DUxLW) and 43 Commercial Hybrid x Large White (CHxLW) were fed two diets differing for the content of crude protein (CP), with the aim to evaluate the effects of these diets on growth, carcass and thigh traits. Pigs were allotted to two groups and fed high protein (HP) and low protein (LP) diet. Within each dietary group, 3 diets were formulated, for the initial phase of growth (from 79 to 112 days, 17.3% and 15.4% CP as fed basis for the HP and LP diet, respectively), for the intermediated phase of growth (from 113 to 196 days, 15.1% and 13.7% CP as fed basis for the HP and LP diet, respectively) and for the finishing period (from 197 to 272 days, 13.4% and 11.4% CP as fed basis for the HP and LP diet, respectively). HP diets were supplemented with Lysine, LP were supplemented also with Methionine and Threonine. Pigs were slaughtered at nine months of age. Body weight (BW), average daily gain, total feed intake and feed conversion ratio were not affected by diet. Carcass weight, thigh weight, backfat and lean thickness and lean percentage (Fat-O-Meater, FOM) were not affected by dietary treatments, whilst backfat thickness and FOM were significantly higher (P<0.01) in DUxLW and CHxLW pigs genotype respectively. A reduction of about 15% (12% to 17%) of the dietary CP recommended by nutritional requirements does not affect the main productive performances and carcass characteristics of pigs slaughtered at around 160 kg of BW

    Unifying deterministic and stochastic ecological dynamics via a landscape-flux approach

    Get PDF
    We develop a landscape-flux framework to investigate observed frequency distributions of vegetation and the stability of these ecological systems under fluctuations. The frequency distributions can characterize the population-potential landscape related to the stability of ecological states. We illustrate the practical utility of this approach by analyzing a forest-savanna model. Savanna, and Forest states coexist under certain conditions, consistent with past theoretical work and empirical observations. However, a new Grassland state, unseen in the corresponding deterministic model, emerges as an alternative quasi-stable state under fluctuations, providing a novel theoretical basis for the appearance of widespread grasslands in some empirical analyses. The ecological dynamics are determined by both the population-potential landscape gradient and the steady-state probability flux. The flux quantifies the net input/output to the ecological system and therefore the degree of nonequilibriumness. Landscape and flux together determine the transitions between stable states characterized by dominant paths and switching rates. The intrinsic potential landscape admits a Lyapunov function, which provides a quantitative measure of global stability. We find that the average flux, entropy production rate, and free energy have significant changes near bifurcations under both finite and zero fluctuation. These may provide both dynamical and thermodynamic origins of the bifurcations. We identified the variances in observed frequency time traces, fluctuations and time irreversibility as kinematic measures for bifurcations. This new framework opens the way to characterize ecological systems globally, to uncover how they change among states, and to quantify the emergence of new quasi-stable states under stochastic fluctuations

    Coordination and spin state equilibria as a function of pH, ionic strength, and protein concentration in oxidized dimeric Scapharca inaequivalvis hemoglobin.

    Get PDF
    The oxidized homodimeric Scapharca inaequivalvis hemoglobin undergoes changes in coordination and spin state as a function of pH, ionic strength, and protein concentration which have been monitored by optical absorption spectroscopy. Three species contribute to the spectra between pH 5.8 and 8.7: (i) a hexacoordinate high spin aquomet derivative, whose concentration is essentially constant over the whole pH range analyzed; (ii) a pentacoordinate high spin component which prevails at alkaline pH values, and (iii) a hexacoordinate low spin hemichrome, which is formed at acid pH. The contribution of each of the components to the observed spectra was calculated with the singular value decomposition procedure and has been described quantitatively in terms of a linkage scheme which accounts for the change in heme coordination and for the observation that the high spin to low spin transition entails dissociation into monomers. An important feature of the linkage scheme is the cooperative binding of protons to aquomet dimers. Stopped flow experiments to study the kinetics indicate that dissociation into monomers is the rate-limiting process. The unusually strong tendency of oxidized HbI to loose the heme-bound water molecule is discussed in terms of strain in the iron-proximal histidine bond

    Personalities influence spatial responses to environmental fluctuations in wild fish

    Get PDF
    Although growing evidence supports the idea that animal personality can explain plasticity in response to changes in the social environment, it remains to be tested whether it can explain spatial responses of individuals in the face of natural environmental fluctuations. This is a major challenge in ecology and evolution as spatial dynamics link individual‐ and population‐level processes. In this study, we investigated the potential of individual personalities to predict differences in fish behaviour in the wild. Specifically, our goal was to answer if individual differences in plasticity of space use to sea surface temperature could be explained by differences in personality along the reactive–proactive axis. To address this question, we first conducted repeated standard laboratory assays (i.e., open‐field test, novel object test and mirror stimulation test) to assess the personality type of 76 wild‐caught Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua). Next, we released the fish back into the sea and monitored their spatial behaviour over large temporal (16 months) and spatial (a whole fjord) scales, using high‐resolution acoustic tracking. We demonstrate that (a) cod personality traits are structured into a proactive–reactive syndrome (proactive fish being more bold, exploratory and aggressive), (b) mean depth use of individuals is mainly driven by sea temperature and (c) personality is a significant predictor of home range changes in the wild, where reactive, but not proactive, individuals reduced their home range as sea temperature increased. These findings expand our understanding of the ecological consequences of animal personality and the mechanisms shaping spatial dynamics of animals in nature.publishedVersio
    corecore